Global Voices
[#527]
Education EducationWhat does an education get you? In ancient times in China, education was the only way out of poverty, in recent times it has been the best way. China's economic boom and talk of the merits of hard work have created an expectation that to study is to escape poverty. But these days China's higher education system only leads to jobs for a few, educating a new generation to unemployment and despair.duration 56:46
STEREO

1:00 am

AfroPop: The Ultimate Cultural Exchange
[#501]
A Lot Like YouEliaichi Kimaro is a mixed-race, first-generation American with a Tanzanian father and Korean mother. When her retired father moves back to Tanzania, Eliaichi begins a project that evocatively examines the intricate fabric of multiracial identity, and grapples with the complex ties that children have to the cultures of their parents. Kimaro decides to document her father's path back to his family and Chagga culture. In the process, she learns more deeply about the heritage that she took for granted as a child. Yet as she talks to more family members, especially her aunts, she uncovers a cycle of sexual violence that resonates with her work and life in the United States. When Kimaro speaks with her parents about the oppression that her aunts face, she faces a jarring disconnect between immigrant generations on questions of patriarchy and violence.duration 56:46
STEREO TVPG (Secondary audio: none)

2:00 am

POV
[#2601]
HomegoingsThrough the eyes of funeral director Isaiah Owens, the beauty and grace of African American funerals are brought to life. Filmed at Owens Funeral Home in New York City's historic Harlem neighborhood, "Homegoings" takes an up-close look at the rarely seen world of undertaking in the black community, where funeral rites draw on a rich palette of tradition, history and celebration. Combining cinema verite with intimate interviews and archival photographs, the film paints a portrait of the dearly departed, their grieving families and a man who sends loved ones "home."duration 56:46
STEREO TVPG (Secondary audio: none)

Tavis Smiley
[#3145]
Tavis talks with former hedge-fund trader Sam Polk, founder and executive director of Groceryships. The "wealth addict"-turned-philanthropist shares why he walked away from Wall Street and reassessed his priorities. Tavis also chats with multiple Emmy-winning actress Rhea Perlman. The 4-time Emmy winner and one of television's most loved comic actresses outlines her character in the TV Land comedy, Kirstie.duration 26:46
STEREO

Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
[#1725H]
DETROIT'S BANKRUPTCY AND WORKER PENSIONS - Detroit owes a total of $ 18 billion to banks, investors and 23,000 present and former city workers. How much will workers' pensions likely be cut? Should pensioners be treated differently than banks and bondholders? Lucky Severson reports from Detroit on the anguished debate there over what would be fair. THE DALAI LAMA'S "SECULAR ETHICS" - The Dalai Lama is in the US teaching what he calls "secular ethics." Kate Olson reports on the Dalai Lama's recent visit to Emory University in Atlanta, where he spoke of the compassion that he says, can make possible a world-wide ethic that everyone could embrace - religious or not. PROMOTING RACIAL RECONCILIATION - A Belief and Practice segment on the leaders of the predominantly white Episcopal Church in Louisiana who are urging their parishioners to repent and ask forgiveness for racism toward Louisiana's large black community.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE

5:00 am

Nature
[#3106]
Honey Badgers: Masters of Mayhem"Honey badger is bad ass." Those words and corresponding video became a YouTube sensation with 51 million hits. This relentless little creature is one the most fearless animals in the world, renowned for its ability to confront grown lions, castrate charging buffalo, and shrug off the toxic defenses of stinging bees, scorpions, and snakes. Little is known about its behavior in the wild or why it is so aggressive. This film follows three badger specialists in South Africa who take on these masters of mayhem in ways that must be seen to be believed.duration 56:46
STEREO TVPG (Secondary audio: none)

MORNING

6:00 am

African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross
[#104H]
Making A Way Out of No Way (1897-1940)Something from Nothing portrays the Jim Crow era, when African Americans struggled to build their own worlds within the harsh, narrow confines of segregation. At the turn of the 20th century, a steady stream of African Americans left the South, fleeing the threat of racial violence, and searching for better opportunities in the North and the West. Leaders like Ida B. Wells, W.E.B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington and Marcus Garvey organized, offering vastly different strategies to further black empowerment and equality. Yet successful black institutions and individuals were always at risk. At the same time, the ascendance of black arts and culture showed that a community with a strong identity and sense of pride was taking hold in spite of Jim Crow. "The Harlem Renaissance" would not only redefine how America saw African Americans, but how African Americans saw themselves.duration 56:16
STEREO TVPG-V (Secondary audio: DVI)

7:00 am

Global Voices
[#405]
New Year BabyBorn in a Thai refugee camp on Cambodian New Year, filmmaker Socheata Poeuv grew up in the US never knowing that her family had survived the Khmer Rouge genocide. In this documentary, she embarks on a journey to Cambodia in search of the truth and why her family's history had been buried in secrecy for so long.duration 55:14
STEREO (Secondary audio: none)

8:00 am

Global Voices
[#527]
Education EducationWhat does an education get you? In ancient times in China, education was the only way out of poverty, in recent times it has been the best way. China's economic boom and talk of the merits of hard work have created an expectation that to study is to escape poverty. But these days China's higher education system only leads to jobs for a few, educating a new generation to unemployment and despair.duration 56:46
STEREO

9:00 am

Tavis Smiley
[#3145]
Tavis talks with former hedge-fund trader Sam Polk, founder and executive director of Groceryships. The "wealth addict"-turned-philanthropist shares why he walked away from Wall Street and reassessed his priorities. Tavis also chats with multiple Emmy-winning actress Rhea Perlman. The 4-time Emmy winner and one of television's most loved comic actresses outlines her character in the TV Land comedy, Kirstie.duration 26:46
STEREO

Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
[#1725H]
DETROIT'S BANKRUPTCY AND WORKER PENSIONS - Detroit owes a total of $ 18 billion to banks, investors and 23,000 present and former city workers. How much will workers' pensions likely be cut? Should pensioners be treated differently than banks and bondholders? Lucky Severson reports from Detroit on the anguished debate there over what would be fair. THE DALAI LAMA'S "SECULAR ETHICS" - The Dalai Lama is in the US teaching what he calls "secular ethics." Kate Olson reports on the Dalai Lama's recent visit to Emory University in Atlanta, where he spoke of the compassion that he says, can make possible a world-wide ethic that everyone could embrace - religious or not. PROMOTING RACIAL RECONCILIATION - A Belief and Practice segment on the leaders of the predominantly white Episcopal Church in Louisiana who are urging their parishioners to repent and ask forgiveness for racism toward Louisiana's large black community.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE

11:00 am

Nature
[#3106]
Honey Badgers: Masters of Mayhem"Honey badger is bad ass." Those words and corresponding video became a YouTube sensation with 51 million hits. This relentless little creature is one the most fearless animals in the world, renowned for its ability to confront grown lions, castrate charging buffalo, and shrug off the toxic defenses of stinging bees, scorpions, and snakes. Little is known about its behavior in the wild or why it is so aggressive. This film follows three badger specialists in South Africa who take on these masters of mayhem in ways that must be seen to be believed.duration 56:46
STEREO TVPG (Secondary audio: none)

AFTERNOON

12:00 pm

African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross
[#104H]
Making A Way Out of No Way (1897-1940)Something from Nothing portrays the Jim Crow era, when African Americans struggled to build their own worlds within the harsh, narrow confines of segregation. At the turn of the 20th century, a steady stream of African Americans left the South, fleeing the threat of racial violence, and searching for better opportunities in the North and the West. Leaders like Ida B. Wells, W.E.B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington and Marcus Garvey organized, offering vastly different strategies to further black empowerment and equality. Yet successful black institutions and individuals were always at risk. At the same time, the ascendance of black arts and culture showed that a community with a strong identity and sense of pride was taking hold in spite of Jim Crow. "The Harlem Renaissance" would not only redefine how America saw African Americans, but how African Americans saw themselves.duration 56:16
STEREO TVPG-V (Secondary audio: DVI)

1:00 pm

Global Voices
[#405]
New Year BabyBorn in a Thai refugee camp on Cambodian New Year, filmmaker Socheata Poeuv grew up in the US never knowing that her family had survived the Khmer Rouge genocide. In this documentary, she embarks on a journey to Cambodia in search of the truth and why her family's history had been buried in secrecy for so long.duration 55:14
STEREO (Secondary audio: none)

Tavis Smiley
[#3145]
Tavis talks with former hedge-fund trader Sam Polk, founder and executive director of Groceryships. The "wealth addict"-turned-philanthropist shares why he walked away from Wall Street and reassessed his priorities. Tavis also chats with multiple Emmy-winning actress Rhea Perlman. The 4-time Emmy winner and one of television's most loved comic actresses outlines her character in the TV Land comedy, Kirstie.duration 26:46
STEREO

3:30 pm

Nightly Business Report
[#33039H]
Tonight on Nightly Business Report, investors kicked off the week in a buying mood, sending the S&P to a record. Where's the enthusiasm coming from and how long will it last? And, the first of our three-part series tonight on the changing health insurance industry focuses on a hospital that's not only providing care, but also plans that cover it.duration 26:46
STEREO TVG

Nightly Business Report
[#33039H]
Tonight on Nightly Business Report, investors kicked off the week in a buying mood, sending the S&P to a record. Where's the enthusiasm coming from and how long will it last? And, the first of our three-part series tonight on the changing health insurance industry focuses on a hospital that's not only providing care, but also plans that cover it.duration 26:46
STEREO TVG

Charlie Rose
[#20046H]
(original broadcast date: 2/24/14) * A discussion about the unrest in Ukraine with former Ambassador to Ukraine John Herbst; Iam Bremmer, President of the Eurasia Group; Charles Kupchan, professor of international relations at Georgetown University and a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations; and Fiona Hill, director of the Center on the US and Europe and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. * Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman at Google and Google Ideas Director Jared Cohen on "New Digital Age Grants."duration 56:46
STEREO TVRE

Tavis Smiley
[#3146Z]
Tavis talks with international relations scholar Robert English. The director of the University of Southern California's School of International Relations and former Defense Department policy analyst assesses the crisis in Ukraine. Tavis also chats with Philomena co-star, co-writer and producer Steve Coogan. The Oscar nominee and well-known English impressionist reflects on his transition from comedy to dramatic acting and on writing for the big screen.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE

Roadtrip Nation
[#906H]
In-Studio Interviews: David Bader and Milena AcostaFor the first time ever, this season includes three in-studio episodes filmed at Roadtrip Nation headquarters. Using a transformed 1972 Winnebago as a stage in front of a live audience, Alumni Roadtrippers Ray, Mariana, and Hannah interview David Bader, Director of Education at the Aquarium of the Pacific, and Milena Acosta, Education Outreach Supervisor at the Aquarium of the Pacific. The audience gains insight into each guest's path, including how David followed his childhood passion to his current position, and how Milena's choice of "love over career" has led to a fulfilling destination. The guests then present a few interesting artifacts from the museum.duration 26:46
STEREO TVPG

Navigate By Date

TV Technical Issues

TV Technical Issues

(DT25-1 through 25-3) Another station on Fremont Tower needs to perform more maintenance work overnight, requiring other TV
stations to shut down their signals for the safety of the workers. KQET’s signal will turn off late Thurs/early Friday
between midnight and 12:30am, and should return by 6am Friday morning. Many receivers will be able to […]

(DT25-1 through 25-3) Another station on Fremont Tower needs to perform maintenance work overnight, requiring that other TV
stations shut down their signals for the safety of the workers. KQET’s signal will turn off late Tues/early Wednesday
between midnight and 12:30am, and should return by 5am Wednesday morning. Many receivers will be able to recover […]

(DT54.1 through DT54.5) Our Over the Air signals from our KQEH transmitter on Monument Peak (the DT54s) will need to be switched
from our Main antenna to our Auxillary antenna while climbers inspect the tower for possible maintenance needs. Once the inspection
is done, we will switch back. The two switches will account for two […]